Association between serum ALT levels and incidence of new-onset diabetes in general population of Japanese: a longitudinal observational study (ISSA-CKD)

Author:

Morinaga AkikoORCID,Iwanaga Kazuyo,Maki Kaori,Ueno Tamami,Kawano Kazumi,Funakoshi Shunsuke,Yamanokuchi Toshitaka,Tsuji Masayoshi,Abe Makiko,Satoh Atsushi,Kawazoe Miki,Maeda ToshikiORCID,Yoshimura Chikara,Takahashi Koji,Tada Kazuhiro,Ito Kenji,Yasuno Tetsuhiko,Kawanami Daiji,Masutani Kosuke,Arima Hisatomi

Abstract

ObjectiveWe aimed to clarify the relationship between serum alanine transaminase (ALT) levels and incidence of new-onset diabetes in a Japanese general population.SettingPopulation-based retrospective cohort study using annual health check-up data for residents of Iki City, Nagasaki Prefecture, Japan.ParticipantsA total of 5330 Japanese individuals (≥30 years old) without diabetes at baseline were analysed.Primary and secondary outcome measuresSerum ALT levels were determined using an enzymatic method and were classified into gender-specific quartile groups as follows: group 1 (3–16 U/L in men and 3–13 U/L in women), group 2 (17–21 U/L in men and 14–16 U/L in women), group 3 (22–29 U/L in men and 17–22 U/L in women) and group 4 (30–428 U/L in men and 23–268 U/L in women). The study outcome was the incidence of diabetes (fasting glucose ≥7.0 mmol/L, non-fasting glucose ≥11.1 mmol/L, glycated haemoglobin ≥6.5% or use of glucose-lowering therapies).ResultsAfter an average follow-up period of 5.0 years, 279 individuals developed diabetes. The incidence rate of diabetes increased with elevation of serum ALT levels (0.7% per 100 person-years in group 1, 0.9% in group 2, 0.9% in group 3 and 1.7% in group 4) (p<0.001 for trend). This association was significant after adjustment for other risk factors including age, sex, obesity, hypertension, dyslipidaemia, smoking, current daily alcohol intake and regular exercise (p<0.001 for trend). Comparable associations were observed between men and women (p=0.459 for interaction).ConclusionSerum ALT levels were associated with future development of diabetes in the general Japanese population.

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

General Medicine

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